Uncover the hidden role of saving in crises and how it can fuel growth or trigger downturns. This clear, accessible analysis will help readers understand the forces shaping business cycles.
This nonfiction work explains the two sides of the saving process and how they affect employment, demand, and prosperity. It contrasts different forms of saving—one that can stimulate investment and one that can depress the economy—so readers can see why crises occur and how responses might work.
Accessible and practical, the book lays out the theory with diagrams and step-by-step reasoning, then explores the real-world consequences for workers, businesses, and policymakers. It invites readers to rethink common ideas about savings, investment, and how to sustain a healthy economy.
- Learn the three phases of saving and how they influence demand for labor.
- Compare capitalistic versus impairing forms of saving and their effects on employment.
- See how savings flow can both stimulate production and cause downturns in different situations.
- Explore the proposed ideas for interpreting cycles and improving economic resilience.
Ideal for readers of economics, history of business cycles, and policy-minded audiences seeking a foundational perspective on how savings shape economies.